Wednesday, May 19, 2010

There are a few things you prepare to live your life without when you go vegan. They aren't big deals really. Things you may have not even really liked until you realized that it didn't fit into a compassionate lifestyle. For someone like me, with a mild case of oppositional defiant disorder, this could go either way.

Exhibit A : Eggs with a Liquid Yoke.

I liked them well enough. They played a critical role in the traditional American breakfast. But let's be honest, is having an egg you can dip your toast in worth the systematic cruelty and seriously sociopathic exploitation that is the egg industry? I know I could never enjoy another egg that came from a helpless little bird confined in a filthy crowded cage for their entire life. How those folks over at the UEP can look themselves in the mirror is beyond me. So, I live my life enjoying the scrambled tofu version of American breakfast and sleep at night.

When I first started looking through Betty's book, I have to admit there was a few recipes that stood out as being somewhat impossible. Poached eggs was one of those. The vegan poached egg seemed like a culinary trick that would be some kind of mythical beast. Rumored to have been spotted at a random veg restaurant stumbled across on a demo tour or road trip. One might even be inclined to call it a "Unicorn" of sorts. It takes a few steps and a nifty little tool but it was so worth it. Who doesn't love unicorns?*

SO - Here is the first of many "Unicorns" featured in one of the most popular breakfast dishes of all time . . .

Poached Egg

1 Package of Firm Tofu (drained and cut into 4 rectangular pieces)

1 Batch of the Cheese Sauce in our Mac & Cheese recipe ( I know you will have a bunch leftover but if you also pick up some Macaroni - You'll also have lunch for a week)

With warm water rinse your Flavor Injector - YES - I know these things are meant for crazy meat eaters and seriously scary looking BUT really I love mine now. It has been pointed out to me that I am partial to food that has some kind of injected filling and my response to that is "Who doesn't love pie?". OK - back to the recipe.

Fill your injector with Cheese Sauce. Take your Tofu and one at a time, slowly stick the injector in the center of one of the shorter sides of the rectangle. Make sure it doesn't go in to far. You don't want to pierce one of the sides. Then - this is key - gently move the Tofu back and forth. Don't move the needle - it will tear a big hole on the outside of the tofu. But if you move the Tofu, it creates a pocket in the tofu while keeping the injection spot as small as possible.

Fill all 4 Tofu Pieces.

On a lined cookie sheet, bake the Tofu for 20 minutes or until it is a golden brown. At 10 minutes, Flip the Tofu to make sure both sides get brown. Some of the Cheese Sauce will pour out. Don't worry about that. When you pull it out - right before you put it on the dish - slowly inject more Cheese Sauce. You're going to want to inject so much the Tofu looks like it might burst. That's why you go slow so you can watch it.

While the Tofu is baking, make your Fake Bacon and other parts of the dish. In your beloved little cast iron skillet, cook the Tempeh Bacon in some Olive Oil and Liquid Smoke.

In a small sauce pan, mix all the Hollandaise sauce ingredients with a whisk over a low heat.
(this will thicken pretty fast so don't prepare until you are almost ready to make up the dish)

Toast the English Muffins.

Stack the dish like so : 1 half of an English Muffin, desired amount of Spinach, Bacon, Avocado, "Poached Egg" and then pour the desired amount of Hollandaise sauce over the top. Throw a dash of Paprika on there to top her off. This recipe should make 4 servings.

Fabulous. I can't wait to try this. But I will make a few alterations. I am going to use a glass the size of an English muffin to cut the tofu instead of making squares--it will be round. I am also going to try a recipe I found on Zucchini Breath's Big Raw blog for apple sage sausage instead of the tempeh bacon. I have been wanting a way to make the runny yolk. Now I found it. Thanks!!!

I just recently discovered this blog and LOVE IT. However, as much as I don't want to, I must comment with a gripe. Being the weird person I am, I can't help but notice every time you talk about an egg "yoke", you misspell it. It's spelled "yolk". Sorry, and thank you :) Continue posting great recipes!